HIGHLANDER: ENDGAME

SYNOPSIS:The fourth and, by all accounts, final chapter in the Highlander franchise finds
time-tripping immortal Connor McLeod (Christopher Lambert) and his young kinsman and
fellow immortal, Duncan McLeod (Adrian Paul from the Highlander T.V. series) crossing
swords with redoubtable arch-enemy Jacob Kell (Bruce Payne). Some five hundred years
earlier Conan and Kell were firm friends, but ever since Conan was forced to kill Kell's
father during a witch-hunt incident, Kell has been after Connor's head. A lengthy series
of flashbacks, each set in a different century, graphically document Connor and Kell's
bloody run-ins. Now, high on a rooftop in modern-day New York, Connor, Duncan and Kell
must finally put their immortal lives on the line and settle things once and for all.

"Though the first Highlander film in 1986 (directed by Aussie Russell Mulcahy in the
same flashy style that characterised his video clips) proved to be an entertaining load of
codswallop that went on to do healthy box-office business, its two uninspired sequels -
1991's Highlander 2: The Quickening (also directed by Mulcahy) and 1994's Highlander 3:
The Final Dimension, directed by Andrew Monahan, both wore out their welcome virtually in
the opening reels. By and large, Highlander: Endgame is a blatantly opportunistic attempt
to capture a new generation of fans by killing off Lambert's tired Connor character and
passing the theatrical baton (or sword) to the younger, more attractive immortal that
Adrian Paul created in the short-lived Highlander TV series. Unfortunately, judging by
what writer Joel Soisson has come up with here, the franchise is already dead in the
water. Either unwilling or unable to tamper with a proven formula, Soisson has cobbled
together what amounts to an overly familiar rehash of all the sword and sorcery set-pieces
which have been become de rigeur not just for this particular series but also for films of
this genre in general. From an acting point of view, only Bruce Payne as the evil Kell
looks like he's having any fun. Putting his arched eyebrows to good use, he is a
scenery-chewing scene-stealer par excellence and there's little that Lambert, with his
permanent pained expression, can do about it. Adrian Paul is a handsome hunk but that's
not an asset this enterprise needs. If the film lives at all it's in the sheer exuberance
of Douglas Aarniokoski's direction. Pausing for neither narrative cohesion not logic, there
is atmosphere to spare in the Gothic Romanian landscapes he had chosen, and when the
battles erupt, he keeps them brisk and bloody. That said, it's still a film for the
die-hard fan only, and its trip to the video shelf is imminent."Leo Cameron